Doug E Mac
Take 1 (one) PC based home recording studio, fold in 1(one) musical vision, shake well, place on Internet.
Serves millions (1,000,000's)
Now you have the ultimate challenge for the egomaniacal prima-donna who's only obstacle to realizing her/his musical vision was having to work with other egomaniacal prima-donnas who each had their OWN musical vision.
Now you don't need 'em. So waddya gonna DO?
Why this name?
Well it was either that or "Dust Ruffle and the Large Animal Heads" and Doug E Mac is a lot easier to type.
Do you play live?
Not professionally but I do abuse my friends when they get drunk enough.
How, do you think, does the internet (or mp3) change the music industry?
For the better. It takes the power out of the hands of the record company executives and puts it back into the hands of the individual musician where it belongs.
Would you sign a record contract with a major label?
Well... if they offer me LOTS and LOTS of money and complete artistic control... yadda yadda.
Band History:
Doug McGee was born Douglas Anor Anderson on August 19, 1952 in Tacoma, WA. Coming of age in the Seattle area during the wild and wonderful Sixties, he picked up his first guitar at age 12 and was immediately told to turn it down.
After the usual list of garage bands and basement jams, he joined a band in progress – they were still working on putting together their first set list and hadn’t chosen a name yet – which lasted for about six months of practice in a mini-storage unit and two paying gigs before they broke up. He came away from that project with the nickname ‘Max’ and a new friend.
Vocalist Julie Bentley was so impressed by Doug’s guitar and vocal backup work that when she joined the Top 40 band ‘Racer’ in 1981 she immediately called him to become their desperately needed Lightman. Julie married Lead Guitarist Keith Sternberg and the core group consisting of Julie, Keith, Doug and Soundman Steve ‘Dogman’ Dooley stayed together through many personnel changes as well as Keith and Julie’s not so amicable divorce. By the latter half of the Eighties the band had risen to the heady upper reaches of the Seattle Top 40 scene through sheer longevity.
With the beginning of the decline of the club scene Steve and Doug left the band and Doug went to work for a stage production company called Avrock owned by local Soundman Kevin McCulley. The company’s credits include such used-to-be-bigs as Foghat, The Guess Who and The Outlaws. Dougs closest brush with fame came in the parking lot behind The Prime Rib Palace in Kirkland, WA where he got a chance to smoke and joke with Roger Fisher of Heart fame. When Doug returned home that night to impress his girlfriend by telling her that he had passed up a chance to go to Roger Fishers house to come home and be with her she replied “Who’s Roger Fisher?” He has bitterly regretted that decision ever since.
After a series of losing bouts with cocaine culminating in a two year prison sentence Doug – who has always believed that control is an illusion – went to work building industrial control systems. Go figure.
He now produces music on his PC using Cakewalk’s Sonar in his spare time and wishes to be just like Warren Zevon only without the cancer.
Your influences?
Jackson Browne, Lyle Lovett, Warren Zevon, Van Morrison, Chris Rea, Greg Brown, Bonnie Raitt, Ani DiFranco, Mellissa Etheridge, Bob Dylan, Gwar, Metallica, Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Frank Zappa, Crystal Method, Paul Oakenfeld & Fatboy Slim, Paul VanDyk, Paul Simon and my friends Jake, Josh, Jeremy, Julie and all the rest of the J's.
Favorite spot?
Pacific Northwest
Equipment used:
Dell Dimension 8300, Cakewalk Sonar, Ovation Celebrity 6 & 12 String and a Roland RD-150. (Or is that an RO-150... I can never tell.)
Anything else...?
the oxen are slow but the earth is patient
More stormsurf at Damon
Fireworks, Comet & Lightning on the beach at Perth
Stormsurf at Damon Point Thanksgiving 2006
Todd at Crescent
The island at Crescent Beach